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  • Brief created: 2022
  • For policymakers

Business (not) for peace: Incentives and disincentives for corporate engagement on good governance and peaceful development in the African context

Based on:

Journal Article (2019)

Paywalled link

 This research is a review piece that examines assumptions about the private sector and its peace and development impact, and also questions those assumptions that are underlying major policy instruments, particularly in Europe.

Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

There is a major assumption underlying important policy instruments, especially in Europe, that there is an inherent benefit to private sector development, that the private sector has a positive impact in reducing conflict and promoting peace and development.

The assumption is also that the private sector is therefore a necessary partner in development, who has an incentive to pursue positive peace and development goals. This article’s significance is that it critically analyses this assumption.

 

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Ganson, Brian. 'Business (not) for peace: Incentives and disincentives for corporate engagement on good governance and peaceful development in the African context'. Acume. https://www.acume.org/r/business-not-for-peace-incentives-and-disincentives-for-corporate-engagement-on-good-governance-and-peaceful-development-in-the-african-context/

Key findings

  • The main argument of the article is that this assumption is untrue.
  • The article rallies evidence that shows that the private sector is not a necessary nor consistently positive actor in promoting development and peace.

    This is especially true in the African context, where business and private interests are often implicated in conflict escalation rather than peaceful development.

Proposed action

  • A regulatory approach is required
  • One thing especially European policy makers could do is to stop subsidising and actively pushing companies into fragile areas.

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Acknowledgements

Special thanks to Antoine Germain for preparation assistance

We would like to extend a special thank you to Antoine Germain, for their invaluable contribution in assisting the preparation of this research summary.

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Business (not) for peace: Incentives and disincentives for corporate engagement on good governance and peaceful development in the African context

Cite this brief: Ganson, Brian. 'Business (not) for peace: Incentives and disincentives for corporate engagement on good governance and peaceful development in the African context'. Acume. https://www.acume.org/r/business-not-for-peace-incentives-and-disincentives-for-corporate-engagement-on-good-governance-and-peaceful-development-in-the-african-context/

Brief created by: Professor Brian Ganson | Year brief made: 2022

Original research:

  • Ganson, B., ‘Business (not) for peace: Incentives and disincentives for corporate engagement on good governance and peaceful development in the African context’ 26 (2) (pp. 209–232) https://doi.org/10.1080/10220461.2019.1607546. – https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10220461.2019.1607546

Research brief:

This research is a review piece that examines assumptions about the private sector and its peace and development impact, and also questions those assumptions that are underlying major policy instruments, particularly in Europe.

There is a major assumption underlying important policy instruments, especially in Europe, that there is an inherent benefit to private sector development, that the private sector has a positive impact in reducing conflict and promoting peace and development.

The assumption is also that the private sector is therefore a necessary partner in development, who has an incentive to pursue positive peace and development goals. This article’s significance is that it critically analyses this assumption.

Findings:

The main argument of the article is that this assumption is untrue.

The article rallies evidence that shows that the private sector is not a necessary nor consistently positive actor in promoting development and peace.

This is especially true in the African context, where business and private interests are often implicated in conflict escalation rather than peaceful development.

Advice:

A regulatory approach is required

    • An effective regulatory regime will enable good actors that act in a positive way for development and peace.

One thing especially European policy makers could do is to stop subsidising and actively pushing companies into fragile areas.

Empirical Research: Qualitative
|
2019

"Business (not) for peace: Incentives and disincentives for corporate engagement on good governance and peaceful development in the African context"

Cite paper

Ganson, B., ‘Business (not) for peace: Incentives and disincentives for corporate engagement on good governance and peaceful development in the African context’ 26 (2) (pp. 209–232) https://doi.org/10.1080/10220461.2019.1607546.

Published in South African Journal of International Affairs, pp. 209-232.
Peer Reviewed

DOI: 10.1080/10220461.2019.1607546
🔗 Find full paper (Not open access)
Methodology
This is a qualitative research.
comparative case study systematic review

This article is a qualitative review and case study article grounded in secondary theoretical and empirical evidence. Journal articles, government reports, documents from international organisations and many similar types of sources were used, and then applied to 11 particular cases.

This article presents a strong argument that holds up on average, and theoretically. However, it is not very useful at the level of project implementation, and does not yield insights about particular regions, areas or cases.



Funding

This research was independently conducted and did not receive funding from outside of the university.

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